Douglas D. Scott

Snow did an exceptional analysis of those remains, but also cajoled Doug Scott and Melissa Connor into taking the methods they developed in battlefield recovery to the field of forensic science.

Snow’s statement that they should take their methods to a “real” battlefield led them to working for Physicians for Human Rights, the UN El Salvador Truth Commission, the UN Truth Commission for Former Yugoslavia, the International Criminal Tribunal for Former Yugoslavia, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, the U.S. State Department on a case in northern Cyprus, for PHR on the Greek side of Cyprus, and for the Regime Crime Liaison Office in Iraq.

Scott, Douglas, Lawrence Babits, and Charles Haecker (editors) 2006 Fields of Conflict: Battlefield Archaeology from Imperial Rome to Korea, 2 Volumes.

Praeger Security Press, Westport, CT. Cruse, J. Brett with contributions by Martha Doty Freeman and Douglas D. Scott (contributor) 2005 Battles of the Red River War: Archaeological Perspectives on the Indian Campaign of 1874.

Scott, Douglas, Lawrence Babits, and Charles Haecker (editors) 2009 Fields of Conflict: Battlefield Archaeology from Imperial Rome to Korea.

Geier, Clarence R., Lawrence E. Babits, Douglas D. Scott, and David G. Orr (editors) 2010 Historical Archaeology of Military Sites: Method and Topics.

Scott, Douglas D., Peter Bleed, and Stephen Damm 2013 Custer, Cody and the Grand Duke: Camp Alexis and the Royal Buffalo Hunt in Nebraska.

Reprinted in Images of the Recent Past, Readings in Historical Archaeology edited by Charles E. Orser, Jr., pp 355–367, Altimira Press, Walnut Creek, California.

Scott, Douglas D., Peter Bleed, Andrew E. Masich, and Jason Pitsch 1999 An Inscribed Native American Battle Image from the Little Bighorn Battlefield.

Harcourt Brace Custom Publishers, Orlando, FL Scott, Douglas D. and Peter Bleed 2002 Custer and the Grand Duke in Nebraska, 1872: Some Insights from New Photographic Evidence.

In Fields of Conflict: Battlefield Archaeology from Imperial Rome to Korea, Volume I, edited by Douglas Scott, Lawrence Babits, and Charles Haecker, pp 102–120.

Praeger Security Press, Westport, CT. Scott, Douglas and Lucien Haag 2009 “Listen to the Minié Balls”: Identifying Firearms in Battlefield Archaeology.

In Fields of Conflict: Battlefield Archaeology from Imperial Rome to KoreaI, edited by Douglas Scott, Lawrence Babits, and Charles Haecker, pp 102–120.

Scott, Douglas D. 2009 Studying the Archaeology of War: A Model Based on the Investigation of Frontier Military Sites in American Trans-Mississippi West.

In Historical Archaeology of Military Sites: Method and Topics, edited by Clarence R. Geier, Lawrence E. Babits, Douglas D. Scott, and David G. Orr, pp21–30.

In Historical Archaeology of Military Sites: Method and Topics, edited by Clarence R. Geier, Lawrence E. Babits, Douglas D. Scott, and David G. Orr, pp21–30.

In From These Honored Dead: Historical Archaeology of the American Civil War, edited by Clarence R. Geier, Douglas D. Scott, and Lawrence E. Babits, pp. 7–25.

In From These Honored Dead: Historical Archaeology of the American Civil War, edited by Clarence R. Geier, Douglas D. Scott, and Lawrence E. Babits, pp. 26–41.

Thiessen, Thomas D, Steve J. Dasovich, and Douglas D. Scott 2014 Massacre and Battle at Centralia, Missouri, September 27, 1864: Historical and Archaeological Perspectives.

In From These Honored Dead: Historical Archaeology of the American Civil War, edited by Clarence R. Geier, Douglas D. Scott, and Lawrence E. Babits, pp. 26–56.

In Battles and Massacres on the Southwestern Frontier: Historical and Archaeological Perspectives, edited by Ronald K. Wetherington and Frances Levine, pp 134–152, University of Oklahoma Press, Norman.